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A Ghost and His Gold Kindle Edition

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 29 ratings

After Tom and Michelle Cleveland move into their recently built, modern townhouse, their housewarming party is disrupted when a drunken game with an Ouija board goes wrong and summons a sinister poltergeist, Estelle, who died in 1904.
Estelle makes her presence known in a series of terrifying events, culminating in her attacking Tom in his sleep with a knife. But, Estelle isn't alone. Who are the shadows lurking in the background - one in an old-fashioned slouch hat and the other, a soldier, carrying a rifle?
After discovering their house has been built on the site of one of the original farms in Irene, Michelle becomes convinced that the answer to her horrifying visions lie in the past. She must unravel the stories of the three phantoms' lives, and the circumstances surrounding their untimely deaths during the Second Anglo Boer War, in order to understand how they are tied together and why they are trapped in the world of ghosts between life and death. As the reasons behind Estelle's malevolent behaviour towards Tom unfold, Michelle's marriage comes under severe pressure and both their lives are threatened.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B096H39FG3
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ TSL Publications (January 27, 2021)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 27, 2021
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1.9 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 299 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 29 ratings

About the author

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Roberta Eaton Cheadle
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Roberta Eaton Cheadle, is a South African writer and poet specialising in historical, paranormal, and horror novels and short stories. She is an avid reader in these genres and her writing has been influenced by famous authors including Bram Stoker, Edgar Allan Poe, Amor Towles, Stephen Crane, Enrich Maria Remarque, George Orwell, Stephen King, and Colleen McCullough.

Roberta has two published novels and a collection of short stories and has horror, paranormal, and fantasy short stories included in several anthologies. She is also a contributor to the Ask the Authors 2022 (WordCrafter Writing Reference series).

Roberta is also the author and illustrator of sixteen children’s books, illustrator to a further three children's books, and the author and illustrator of three poetry books published under the name of Robbie Cheadle, and has poems and short stories featured in several anthologies under this name.

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
29 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the story engaging and well-written. They appreciate the historical accuracy and detail in the book, which provides an interesting insight into the Boer War. The characters are portrayed as believable and well-developed.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

10 customers mention "Story quality"10 positive0 negative

Customers find the story engaging and well-written. They appreciate the premise and character development. The gritty setting and historical details are well-received. Readers find the past part of the story their favorite.

"...While I thought it was really interesting and, like with Cheadle's earlier book Through the Nethergate, one of my personal favorite parts about her..." Read more

"...To end the haunting, she must learn the specters’ past. The book is gritty and brings the Second Anglo Boer War to life." Read more

"...This book was so much more than a ghost story. It’s a complex read, dealing with many themes that mirror the present-day, including racism, rape,..." Read more

"...This is a well written account of a historical event told in a clever and entertaining way. The characters are carefully developed and believable...." Read more

9 customers mention "History accuracy"9 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's historical accuracy. They find the research and detail impressive. The book provides interesting insights into the Boer War, a conflict they know little about. It presents both sides of the war, with incredible detail mixed in with the current events.

"...With multiple viewpoints, time settings, and an intensely researched historical backdrop, and deeply entrenched themes, there's a lot going on...." Read more

"The author did her homework on this story. It’s a dual time line mystery sprinkled with historical facts and references...." Read more

"...The amount of research and detail Ms. Cheadle put into her accounts of the 1st and 2nd Anglo Boer Wars and the effects it had on the soldiers..." Read more

"...I was impressed by the thorough research that crafted a picture of life in South Africa in the early 1900s...." Read more

4 customers mention "Character development"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the characters believable and well-developed.

"...Cheadle pulls it off by making an understandable story with compelling character arcs...." Read more

"...The characters are carefully developed and believable. I found it very moving and really enjoyed this book." Read more

"...Throughout the novel, the characters’ passion and emotions are effectively described and it brings them to life...." Read more

"Unforgettable Characters Woven Between the Past and the Present!..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2021
    A Ghost and His Gold is an extremely ambitious work, and it's quite impressive Cheadle was able to fit all of it into this short space. With multiple viewpoints, time settings, and an intensely researched historical backdrop, and deeply entrenched themes, there's a lot going on. At the same time, Cheadle pulls it off by making an understandable story with compelling character arcs.

    Probably the greatest achievement within the book was how the 1900-1904 timeline meshes so well with the 2019 timeline. While it does have the typical "figure out why the ghost is haunting us" sort of storyline to it, the way the two are connected makes it all the more intriguing. Estelle, who I'd consider the main ghost and at least the primary source of problems in the 2019 narrative, ties traits of modern-day Tom to people of the era in which she lived and died. Because of the necessary historical backdrop to Estelle's demise, and because of Tom's secret, the way the two timelines come together really works. I will admit that I was a little skeptical of having the 2019 part in the book, but I think it worked out. If you've read Through the Nethergate, you'll probably get the feeling I did that Cheadle used similar mechanisms to mesh past and present as she did in that book.

    Probably the most stunning part of this book, though, is setting. While the setting in <em>Nethergate</em> was well done, it didn't have anywhere near the same feeling as in this book. There's clear love and intimate personal knowledge here. I can feel the grit of the landscape of South Africa here. How she nonchalantly feels the seasons, like a frozen July and a hot February, isn't something I think I could easily pull off. There is something magical about the way the land, not just the time, is treated in this book. It's a very visceral connection to the veld that many of the characters have, even Michelle and Tom in 2019, and even if they don't really know it. Land and the place our hearts are within it is a silent theme behind a lot of the book, but it's a driving force. The British Empire wants it, the farmers want it, and Michelle and Tom's attachment to their house and land brings together the tapestry.

    The negative part of this ambitious scope is that, at times, there can be a lot of information dumps. Most of this comes through in descriptions of the war or the concentration camps. While I thought it was really interesting and, like with Cheadle's earlier book Through the Nethergate, one of my personal favorite parts about her style, it did often interrupt the more character or plot-focused narrative. Though at times the footnotes regarding Boer or South African history can seem a little too easy, other times they're essential or add a richness that would go unnoticed without them. As a whole, I think Cheadle weaved her way through the story and the subject matter well, but there are instances where I think it could have been smoothed. The book could have easily been twice the size and gotten away with it.

    I don't normally put spoiler reviews for pretty new indie books, but I think I will do so here, just a little bit.

    Something I thought was interesting was how Estelle saw the world and how it treated her. It was very "teen", even if very abused and dark. Estelle was brutally raped, and the way her (BIG OL SPOILER) stepmother Marta treated her was horrifying. She grew very bitter about it, but she did so in a way that was simultaneously inward and outwardly focused. How this combination of terrible abuse and festering hatred turned her into a haunting spirit felt so different from other ghosts I've read about or watched on TV. The sadness in her vengeance for her miseries and untimely death was quite palpable.

    That being said, I think Estelle's story could have been expanded. The period of time where she stays with Oom Willem isn't very detailed, and yet it seems like it could have lasted a much longer time. Still, explaining Estelle's relationship with Marta took quite a long time, and I think that made her my favorite character in this book.

    Estelle's story also pounded home the feminist themes of the book, and I greatly appreciate that. Though Estelle's salvation came through forgiveness, the initial criminal is clear, and the need for kindness, equality, and more concern for human rights is apparent. There's other themes that are important, but I've pointed out the ones I find most important in this review.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2024
    The author did her homework on this story. It’s a dual time line mystery sprinkled with historical facts and references.
    After a drunken night with an Ouija board, Michelle Holland encounters not one ghost but three. And one of them is out to do her and her husband harm. To end the haunting, she must learn the specters’ past.
    The book is gritty and brings the Second Anglo Boer War to life.
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2021
    “A Ghost and His Gold,” by Robbie Cheadle, was a pleasant surprise. The author takes us to South Africa, where Tom and Michelle Cleveland have recently purchased a house in the town of Irene. During a housewarming party and a chance encounter with a Ouija board, readers are drawn back to the era of the second Boer War where Great Britain’s army tried to regain what it lost in the first war. Somewhere along the way, the lure of gold and riches sets the stage for a ghost adventure like no other!

    The Ouija board proves to be the catalyst that opens the door to the past. Michelle is the most receptive to the spirit world. When the others shrug off the temperature changes and the exploding bottles, Michelle senses the ghostly presence.

    The next day, she researches the local history of the area and specifically the house they live in. Michelle makes some interesting discoveries, not only about the house but about Tom and how he lived the year before she met him. By the time Estelle (a supernatural ghost) makes her presence known, Michelle and Tom have collapsed into a paranormal hell.

    Writing about ghosts can be tricky, and this author handles the paranormal aspects of the book well. Supernatural ghosts always have a past agenda to work through. They remain on the earthly plane until their personal trauma or unfinished business is resolved and they can pass into the light. Estelle, the ghost, makes Tom the target of her ire as the reader witnesses his descent into madness.

    The historical aspects of the book are as well presented as the paranormal aspects. Cheadle retells the bloody horror of the Second Boer War in all its graphic detail. This history cements the different aspects of the story joining the past and the present into a cyclical supernatural event.

    In the end, the story is really about family. We learn the story of the Boer farmer, Pieter, and his daughter Estelle’s tragic life. Estelle’s story is truly unforgettable. Be mindful that emotional abuse and trauma within family relationships could trigger some readers.

    This book was so much more than a ghost story. It’s a complex read, dealing with many themes that mirror the present-day, including racism, rape, family issues, and much more. I struggled with my feelings throughout the book, and it felt like I had embarked on a roller coaster of emotion. However, I will not forget the characters, or what I learned about the Second Boer War or the history of Africa. I found the book to be an excellent read!
    2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Shaun Redden
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 14, 2021
    What an exciting read and for me, a passionate Englishman, a worrying one. Wars are never a clean righteous fight. War is nasty and evil if one side wants to win. With the second Boer War Great Britain’s army was sent to retrieve what it lost in the First War, but this time it had the lure of gold and precious stones to lead the way. This book is not just a history book listing Great British victories, no, it deals with much more than that.

    A young couple move into a house built on the site of a farm owned by one of the original fighting Boers. She’s convinced that’s the reason for her nightmares. As the story unfolds we are treated to two soldiers giving their views of the War in which they both died.

    Just, when you think you have this story at your mercy along comes a third ghost, only this one wants revenge!

    There is the sure and steady hand of a master storyteller effortlessly blending all these people’s lives together giving us, the privileged readers, a powerful tale brilliantly put together.
  • Toni Pike
    5.0 out of 5 stars A dramatic paranormal historical story set in South Africa
    Reviewed in Australia on August 17, 2021
    I’m familiar with Roberta Cheadle’s wonderful Sir Chocolate series for children (written under the name of Robbie Cheadle), and I was looking forward to reading one of her adult fiction books. I was not disappointed with this dramatic and enthralling story set in South Africa and dealing with the Second Anglo Boer War.

    This is a moving supernatural thriller that weaves two intertwining stories together. There is a modern-day story about a married couple, Michelle and Tom Cleveland, whose lives are horrifically impacted by a poltergeist, Estelle, who died in 1904. The story switches between past and present. When we go back to the past, we learn a great deal about the Second Anglo Boer War and one farming family at the time.

    I knew a little bit about that war because Australia was involved on the British side. But I had no idea what a cruel and brutal conflict it was, and the horrific ordeal suffered by so many people at the time, including in concentration camps. The history is magnificently brought to life in this very intense story, particularly involving a Boer farmer, Pieter, and his daughter Estelle, who has a very tragic life. It also deals with emotional abuse and trauma within family relationships. Estelle’s story is supremely sad, and that spart of the story will stay in my memory for a long time.

    The modern story I found to be a real page-turner, as Michelle’s husband descends into madness and has all sorts of other problems as secrets from his past are revealed. The problems within their relationship are very complex and disturbing.

    The ghosts from the past have a devastating impact on the modern characters, but the two stories weave together brilliantly. I didn’t know how the modern couple could possibly resolve their differences, but I was swept along as the author managed to bring everything to a very satisfying conclusion.

    If you are interested in history and enjoy mysteries, then this book would be a very good choice. I give it a resounding five stars.
  • professor
    4.0 out of 5 stars An Intense and Dramatic Foray into the 2nd Anglo-Boer War
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 26, 2022
    One thing a reader very quickly learns on opening A Ghost and His Gold is that the author, Roberta Eaton Cheadle is an excellent writer, loves her history, and is possessed of an almost preternatural capacity for painstaking research. Her clear intention in this novel is to weave a factual history of the 2nd Anglo Boer War into a fictional history of the lives of characters of her own making. In this, she succeeds admirably.

    She succeeds brilliantly, too, in creating very real characters with whom the reader can easily empathise (or dislike, or feel contempt for), in a story that grabs the reader’s interest. It helps that the story has an extra twist involving a modern-day couple tortured by a vicious poltergeist and haunted by a couple of conflicted ghosts, and who have a friend who is psychic and reads tarot cards. Some aspects of the war elements are gut-wrenching, particularly near the end where women and children are herded, almost Nazi-like, into wretched, disease-infested camps, with little or no food and water, and bereft of even the basic comforts. And the rape of one of the young key characters, and the ending of her particular story, are absolutely horrific. So, great writing, great characters, great story ....what’s not to like? Nothing, really. This is a very good book, particularly for readers who enjoy historical fiction.

    But I have a couple of issues with it that I can’t shake off. After reading the book, I found myself wondering which should have priority in a historical fiction novel - the story or the history? When one reflects on Gone with the Wind, is the memory focused on the American Civil War or on the turbulent affair between Rhett Butler and Scarlett O’Hara? I ponder, too, the basic principle of fiction writing which demands that the story be driven continually forward and not allowed to flag. That makes me question the author’s choice to open her novel with pages and pages of potted histories of military characters involved in the Boer War, followed by pages and pages of dates relating to the various battles of the war. None of this, I am sure, will stick in the readers’ minds. There is, instead, a danger of losing the reader before he or she reaches the actual story.

    Cheadle’s knowledge of the 2nd Anglo Boer War is phenomenal. The details she offers of dozens of minor skirmishes or large battles, are extraordinary. This would be perfect for a history book. But there is a story here that is stopped in its tracks several times so that the writer can pursue, in almost infinite detail, many minor confrontations between Brits and Boers, that inevitably begin to merge into each other and leave the reader’s mind cluttered with an excess of the minutiae that inhabit these events.

    And there, for me, is the rub. Fiction, by its nature, demands a plot that absorbs, has its share of ups and downs, tensions and quiet moments, but thrusts unflaggingly towards its climax. Here, the never-ending focus of the characters on the war – in their conversations, in their thoughts, in their fears about the possible failures of plans and strategies – all tend to militate against normal reader expectation, and might, indeed, lead to the deathly resort of skipping over pages.

    As for the ghost story. Having barely been made aware of the existence of the ghosts, indeed before seeing them do any real haunting, I found myself sharing their actual past lives as real people. Ghosts are supposed to be ... what? Scary, preternatural, tenebrous, unfathomable? Presenting them, via their previous lives, as real and nice people, virtually eliminates any vestige of the eerie from their ghostly behaviours. Quite simply, it takes the spookiness out of the spooks.

    I do regret sounding so critical of what is an excellent piece of work. I truly believe that a decisive, determined editor, with an eye for pacing, structure and relevance, could polish this into a worthwhile and memorable novel of the Boer War. That is not to say that it isn’t eminently readable in its present form, and I have no doubt that there are many readers, particularly history buffs, who will love it just as it is.
  • Anita Dawes
    4.0 out of 5 stars not to play around with a Ouija board!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 14, 2021
    A Ghost and his Gold is based in South Africa.

    I was expecting a jolly good ghost story, but I wasn’t disappointed, for this story is so much more than that.
    An interesting combination of the paranormal entwined with history. History that had to be closely and accurately researched to ensure that all the details are portrayed sensitively.

    In the beginning of the story, we learn about two ghosts, soldiers who fought and died on opposite sides of the second Boer war. We learn a lot about this war from these two ghosts. Robert, a British soldier, and a Boer called Pieter. Their heart-breaking duel story is brilliantly written, as is the sad story of Estelle, the third and very vengeful ghost and daughter of Pieter.

    Far from ordinary, this story is a complicated tale of revenge.
    I wish I could forget the horrors of the Boer War, but I will never forget these character’s.

    Just remind me never to play with a Ouija board!

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